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Name: Lalaine Anthonette D.

Salvador

Section: ABM12Y1-9mgt

Simile

1. She sing like a rockstar.


2. Mr. John is a wise as an owl.

Metaphor

1. Education is your passport to satisfying employment.


2. The book was a passport to adventure.

Personification

1. This pencil wrote the words perfectly.


2. This word whispers like a tree in the breeze.

Synecdoche

1. I have four mouths to feed at home.


2. Ruth bought a new set of wheels.

Methonymy

1. The orders come directly from the whie house.


2. Let me give you a hand.

Hyperbole

1. I am so tired I could sleep for a year.


2. His teeth were building white.

Oxymoron

1. Her singing was enough to raise the living dead.


2. The room was suddenly filled with deafening silence.

Paradox

1. A rich man is no richer than a poor man.


2. Drowning in the fountain of enternal life.
Allusion

1. Sally had a smile that rivaled that of Mana Lisa.


2. He studies all the time and is a regular Einstein.

Irony

1. Our luxury hotel turned out to be a farm building.


2. The directions were clear as wind.

Onomotopoeia

1. I heard the bees buzzing.


2. The clock goes tick-tock.

Litotes

1. A few unannounced quizzes are not inconceivable.


2. War is not healthy for children and other living things.

Apostrophe

1. Bright star, how I wish I were a steadfast as though art.


2. Oh, mother, how I wish you were here to see the sight.

Alliteration

1. All day within the dreamy dwelling the doors darkened with dew.
2. Lisa loved to look at lizards in the aquarium.

Assonance

1. Talking and walking, hours on end.


2. Twice in the high night.

Consonance

1. Some mammals are clammy.


2. Dragging the lazy languid line along.

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